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Press Releases
COMPANIES STILL LACKING IN DIVERSITY EFFORTS SAYS
WORKPLACEDIVERSITY.COM SURVEY
August 6, 2002 - Despite efforts made by civil rights
organizations and the creation of diversity departments
in many corporations, employees still feel that their
companies' diversity efforts are lacking, according
to a recent survey by WorkplaceDiversity.com, a job
search web site for experienced diversity talent.
The survey, answered by people who visited www.WorkplaceDiversity.com
in July, found that 83.3 percent of respondents felt
that their current employers could do more to promote
workplace diversity. Respondents also indicated that
their there is a disparity between their work workplaces
and their companies' customers with 72.2 percent saying
that their companies do not reflect the diversity of
the communities that they serve. Fifty percent of respondents,
who are diversity job seekers, said that diversity is
a consideration when accepting a job offer. Although
the overwhelming majority of respondents felt that their
employers could do more to promote diversity, 44.4 percent
believed that their employers really care about workplace
diversity.
"These finding show that companies still have
a long way to go with their workplace diversity efforts,"
said Dan Honig, chief operating officer of WorkplaceDiversity.com.
"Employers need to understand that although it
is an employers' job market, workplace diversity is
still important to current employees and to job seekers.
Employers who do not realize the importance of diversity
and successfully implement diversity initiatives could
be losing their share of the top talent to their competitors."
Added Honig, "Employers who are hiring need to
focus on making their environments more diverse. Otherwise,
when the economy changes, they will lose some of their
top talent to companies that value and implement workplace
diversity."
"This survey also shows that companies may be having
difficulty bridging the gap between their desire or
intention to create workplace diversity and actually
doing it," said Honig.
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